Bristol Myers Squibb buys Karuna Therapeutics for $14 billion

The board of directors at Karuna, a founded entity of PureTech Health, and Bristol Myers Squibb unanimously approved the transaction which also equates to $330 per share.

Karuna is a biopharmaceutical company that discovers, develops, and aims to deliver transformative medicines for people living with psychiatric and neurological conditions. Its lead asset, KarXT (xanomeline-trospium), is an antipsychotic with a novel mechanism of action and differentiated efficacy and safety.

Karuna’s New Drug Application (NDA) for KarXT for the treatment of schizophrenia in adults was accepted for review by the US Food and Drug Administration, with a Prescription Drug User Fee Act date of September 26, 2024.

The treatment is also in registrational trials both for adjunctive therapy to existing standard-of-care agents in schizophrenia and for the treatment of psychosis in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. Bristol Myers Squibb said that it believes the treatment represents a significant revenue contribution opportunity and also sees potential from Karuna’s early-stage and pre-clinical pipeline.

PureTech is a founder of Karuna and co-inventor of the KarXT program. If approved, it will be the third therapeutic candidate to be taken from inception at PureTech to FDA regulatory approval.

Tremendous opportunities in neuroscience

“There are tremendous opportunities in neuroscience, and Karuna strengthens our position and accelerates the expansion and diversification of our portfolio in the space. We expect KarXT to enhance our growth through the late 2020s and into the next decade,” said Christopher Boerner, chief executive officer of Bristol Myers Squibb.

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